HR-8743-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Sponsored by Christopher Deluzio (D-PA)
What it does
This bill would require the Surgeon General to develop evidence-informed recommendations for daily screen time limits for children from birth through age 18, broken into six age groups. The Surgeon General would coordinate with a conflict-of-interest-free independent entity in developing the recommendations. Within one year of enactment, the recommendations would be published on the HHS website and submitted to Congress as a formal report. The bill does not mandate any limits, create enforcement mechanisms, or impose penalties on parents, schools, or technology companies.
Who benefits
Parents and caregivers seeking authoritative, government-backed guidance on children's device use. Pediatricians and child health professionals who could reference federal recommendations in clinical settings. Researchers and public health advocates working on children's digital health. Schools and childcare providers looking for evidence-based standards. Children whose development may benefit if caregivers act on the recommendations. Advocacy organizations focused on children's mental health and technology use.
Who is hurt
Technology and social media companies whose products are used heavily by children may face reputational or regulatory pressure if federal recommendations highlight harms. Streaming, gaming, and app developers targeting younger audiences could see reduced usage if recommendations are widely adopted. Independent entities not selected by the Surgeon General may lose a contracting opportunity. Families with limited childcare options who rely on screens may face social stigma if recommendations are publicized without accompanying support resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that screen time among children has risen sharply — the American Psychological Association and the Surgeon General's own 2023 advisory have linked excessive social media use to increased rates of anxiety, depression, and sleep disruption in adolescents. They contend that parents currently lack a single, authoritative federal reference point comparable to dietary guidelines or vaccine schedules, and that evidence-informed recommendations from the Surgeon General would fill that gap without imposing any mandates or restricting anyone's choices.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the research linking screen time to child harm remains contested — many studies rely on self-reported data, show small effect sizes, and do not distinguish between passive consumption and educational or social uses of technology. They contend that issuing federal recommendations without that scientific consensus risks stigmatizing families who depend on screens for childcare, education, or accessibility needs, and that the bill's one-year deadline may pressure the Surgeon General to publish guidelines before the evidence base is sufficiently robust to support them.